What I see is that it is Silicon Lottery that will be suffering. The chance for them to find 9900K 5GHz+ in the future will drop significantly since Intel will remove them in production.
What do you mean by "remove"?
Intel will sell high-quality chips as 9900KS. That's it.
There is also a significant lower chance in the future for an ordinary customer to get lucky and get an 9900K 5GHz+ unless he pays +$100 for the 9900KS.
That's just looking at things complete backwards.
And ordinary customer can, for a fee of $100, get a CPU that is guaranteed to remain stable with high clocks.
Usually, a person looking for such a chip is taking part in a lottery. Some people buy and resell until they get what they wanted.
This is exactly the niche that companies like Silicon Lottery target. You pay them a premium and you're happy with the first sample.
I could keep talking about how Intel is simply trying to make money, but is it really necessary?
Why is this move such a shock?
Had Intel launched two 8C/16T CPUs: 9800K and 9900K - and differentiate them by clocks - we wouldn't have had this discussion. That would have been totally normal.
But for some weird reason, because they run out of numbers and call it "KS", forums burst in flames of anti-Intel-ism.
Intel has not only done this to compete with AMD, they also wanted to prevent Silicon Lottery and ordinary buyers of 9900K to get more value than that they paid for.
Intel is not trying to prevent anyone from doing anything. They're simply making money.
i wonder how bad it really is the 10nm Intel process that they have to appeal to things like this... 127W TDP, and remember this TDP is not calculated when boosting. prepare your Noctua giant fans or Custom loops... cause boy that thing gon be hot.
It will be just as hot as an overclocked 9900K. And many people own overclocked 9900K, so clearly: it's not impossible to sustain.
This is just a CPU with guaranteed 5GHz all-core. It's not more power-hungry than what we have today. In idle it'll still use <10W. At 5GHz all-core it'll use as much as a 9900K run at 5GHz would... or actually less. Since Intel will sell the best quality samples as "KS", at any given frequency it may consume less than an average 9900K.